ADMINISTRATIVE REPORT
Date: July 20, 1998
Author/Local: R Hodgins/7345
CC File No. 5562
TO:
Vancouver City Council
FROM:
General Manager of Engineering Services in Consultation with
the Director of City Plans and the Director of Central Area PlanningSUBJECT:
Major Road Network (Greater Vancouver Transportation Authority)
RECOMMENDATION
A. THAT Council receive this report for INFORMATION as a preliminary listing of the Major Road Network (figure 2) for public review and comments; and
B. THAT this report be circulated for public comment with report back in the Fall of 1998 on the establishment of the Major Road Network.
COMMENTS OF THE GENERAL MANAGER OF ENGINEERING SERVICES
By necessity, the GVTA legislation could not specifically address in detail a number of implementation issues. This is particularly true for major roads and policies will evolve through the Authority Board. Given the local makeup of the Board, it is expected that municipal concerns around the implementation of the legislation will be adequately addressed.
COUNCIL POLICY
Council approved the City Transportation Plan in May of 1997, which includes an arterial street network for illustrative purposes but did not anticipate a "regional road" classification. The Transportation Plan provides for pedestrian priority areas.
PURPOSE
The purpose of this report is:
· to review the background on the creation of the Major Road Network
· to review the criteria proposed by the GVRD for the selection of "Major Roads"
· to review the preliminary network resulting from the proposed regional criteria and to make comments including the need for public review and comments· to review the benefits and costs of establishing a Major Road Network in Vancouver within the framework of the new Greater Vancouver Transportation Authority
· to update Council on current working discussions within the GVRD on this subject.
This report will be forwarded to neighbourhood groups, major employers, interested residents and road users for discussion over the summer at their convenience. In the fall, an information meeting will be held. Finally, Council will be presented with a summary of the public discussion and will hear delegations prior to making a decision on the Major Road Network.
BACKGROUND
Roads have different and often multiple functions. Some carry a large proportion of inter-regional trips and clearly should remain a Provincial responsibility (e.g., Highway 1). Others have a clearly local function which primarily provides access to adjacent land use. In between are roads of regional importance which carry longer distance trips between municipalities, serve important goods movement functions, and may provide capacity for trunk-line transit services.
In 1996 the Province indicated it intended to devolve responsibility to municipalities for maintenance of many of the Provincial Highways in the region. Although Vancouver owns and maintains all its streets, this proposal had severe cost implications for many of the smaller neighbouring municipalities. Accordingly, this proposal was deferred pending negotiations on transportation governance and funding. In addition, the GVRD Regional Engineers Advisory Committee began to define a "Major Road Network" with a view to maintaining regional mobility while obtaining compensatory revenue sources from the Province.
Subsequently, the Greater Vancouver Transportation Authority (GVTA) agreement was approved between the GVRD and the Province. This agreement recognized several key elements of the transportation system including transit, Broadway Rapid Transit, major roads, AirCare and TDM.
Specifically, it recognizes the importance of a Major Road Network (MRN) in order to provide for intra-regional mobility needs, including the movement of goods (e.g., food, business needs) and workers to Vancouver. Moreover, sources of funding to maintain this network were an important element of the agreement. The agreement was reported to Council on February 17, 1998 and approved by the GVRD Board on February 27. At this meeting, the GVRD also adopted principles by which the GVTA would govern the Major Road Network. These are shown in Appendix A. These principles recognize that the responsibility for roads should rest with local municipalities and that the regional (GVTA) role is essentially limited to overall coordination, planning, and funding.
The Province has now prepared legislation to become party to this agreement. The Major Road Network must be set prior to December 31, 1998. Prior to this, Council will approve those roads which will be included in Vancouver. A new Major Road Technical Advisory Committee has already been created and has set three subcommittees:
· Network Definition
- reviews the original GVRD criteria by which roads qualify
· Network Maintenance
-reviews standards of maintenance and sets block funding formulae
· Network Development
-reviews criteria for future inclusion and sets first five-year Capital Plan
The discussion below reviews the criteria that the Regional Engineers Advisory Committee chose and the resulting network proposal.
DISCUSSION
Criteria
To help define a Major Road Network, a preliminary set of criteria was established in 1997 by the GVRD against which arterial streets could be tested. (See Appendix B for details) As more of the criteria are met, the more regionally important the arterial street becomes. The following criteria were proposed by the Committee. A major road must do one or more of the following:
1. Activity Centre
· provides direct access to an Activity Centre
· connects interacting Activity Centres2. Inter-Municipal Travel
· carries inter-regional travel
· connects municipalities
· minimum 70% trips > 10 km and volume >800 vph in peak hour3. Transit Corridor
· minimum of 10 through buses per hour in the peak hour and direction
4. Goods Movement
· minimum of 800 trucks per day
5. Emergency Response
· key elements of the Greater Vancouver Emergency Routes Plan
6. Network Continuity
· connects MRN elements
The above criteria are presently being reviewed by a subcommittee of the Major Road Technical Advisory Committee.
The Major Road Network
· The roads in the region that have been initially tested and meet the above criteria are illustrated in Figure 1, in three classes (see Appendix C):
· Highways and Bridges for which the Province retains jurisdiction
· Former Provincial highways will be added if agreed to by the municipality in which they are situated
· Municipal roads which meet the criteria for major roads but require municipal approval before being added to the network.Those Vancouver streets included in the proposed MRN are shown in Figure 2. Also shown as Figure 3 is the network included in the Transportation Plan for illustrative purposes (May 1997). Note that all streets on the proposed MRN outside the downtown are classified as Primary arterials in the Transportation Plan and are generally truck routes. However, not all City arterials are included in the proposed MRN.
Cost and Benefits of the MNR to Vancouver
Under the existing system, all streets are owned and maintained by the City. The City has control over new construction and operation. For those streets which are classified as part of the Major Road Network, this will not materially change:
· The City retains ownership and control
· The GVTA cannot force the City to rebuild, widen lanes or increase capacity
· The City retains control of traffic management including signalization, signing and road-marking.On the other hand, the City would give up some control once a street is designated as a part of the MRN. These areas include:
· abide by agreed-upon standards to maintain the functionality of the network. The standards discussed at the regional level relate to maintenance levels, i.e. rideability, cleaning, signal outage response times, etc. (This is based on the premise that if a City receives funding for maintenance/operations, they should meet agreed-upon standards.)
· once selected as a major road, both the City and GVTA need to agree if it is to be deleted.
· the people-carrying capacity of a major road could not be reduced without the consent of the City and GVTA. The understanding of this is that municipalities would not be able to remove existing lanes of moving traffic. However, general purpose lanes could be converted into lanes for buses or HOVs if the municipalities so chose. This measure would not preclude the City from improving the pedestrian environment in commercial centres, for example, through adding pedestrian signals, crossings, enhanced sidewalk treatments, and sidewalk bulges where they protect full-time parking. However, this would preclude creation of a Kerrisdale-type of treatment on streets like Kingsway or East Hastings.
· truck routes either added or deleted from the system would require GVTA approval. The existing truck route system within municipalities is grandfathered.Any disputes between a municipality and GVTA would be referred to a third party for binding arbitration with no provision for appeal.
There are two major benefits to the Major Road Network. First, the region will have a network of major roads which provide continuity across municipal boundaries. These routes will be maintained and operated in a reasonably consistent manner.
The second benefit is that municipalities will have access to capital and operating funds for the Major Road Network. This will transfer funding from the property tax base to a more appropriate user-pay base. This is more equitable for Vancouver, which in the past has not received Provincial funding for its roads and yet carries a high proportion of regionally-based traffic on its streets.
For Vancouver, it is expected that we will receive from the GVTA between 2 and 3 million dollars annually in operating funds commencing in 1999, depending on the network designated and the final cost sharing formula. It is expected that some limited capital funding will be available, but this remains to be more fully developed by the GVTA.
Additions to the MRN Within Vancouver
Because of its ownership of streets, Vancouver would be the sole initiator of improvements to the MRN within its borders. Should Council choose to proceed with improvements, these could potentially be eligible for cost sharing with the GVTA subject to the availability of funds and regional priorities. The GVTA would not have the power to initiate projects but would only administer the funding mechanism.
The initial network of major roads is shown in Figure 2. City staff have proposed that Grandview Highway and its connection to Broadway via Nanaimo be included in the MRN at this stage. Similarly, the extension of Main Street to the Port is proposed as a major truck access point. This route constitutes an important (regional) connector to the freeway and truck route.
Downtown Streets Designation
The proposed regional road network in the downtown includes two major roads (Georgia and Hastings) that under any scenario will remain so, as well as several other connecting streets. Staff acknowledge that within the downtown, Georgia and Hastings are logical inclusions in the Major Road Network at this time. In the coming year, the Downtown Transportation Plan will begin to examine downtown transportation needs in the context of adopted land use plans, including livability issues in the emerging downtown residential neighbourhoods. Final designation of other roads in the downtown as part of the Major Road Network at this time would prejudge this process. It would also add an undesirable level of complexity if major roads cannot be removed from the network without the consent of the GVTA. The process and timing for the removal of streets from the network have not yet been spelled out. Smithe-Nelson and Seymour-Howe are now shown on the preliminary Major Road Network, but these streets may change in light of further studies next year. It is suggested that they remain on the preliminary network at this time because of the need for network connectivity. However, prior to final Council consideration of the network, further clarification will be sought from the GVTA on the ability to substitute alternative streets following the Downtown Transportation Plan. If there is flexibility, then the interim designations are appropriate; if not, staff advise caution to such designations.
Pedestrian Priority Areas/Neighbourhoods and Centres
CityPlan, the Transportation Plan, and the draft Community Visions all include the notion of creating neighbourhood centres and facilitating shopping in the centres by creating pedestrian priority areas. In designating major roads the City would be agreeing not to decrease the person carrying capacity of the Major Road Network.
This report raises the question about whether the City would be permitted to create a neighbourhood centre with a pedestrian priority area on a regional road. The Kerrisdale Shopping area is a good existing example of a neighbourhood centre on a major road. Along most of 41st Avenue traffic moves freely. For the several blocks through Kerrisdale traffic slows to accommodate the neighbourhood centre. The regional roads proposal is understood to mean that Council could not reduce the number of lanes on a major road. This makes it difficult, from an urban design perspective, to create a neighbourhood centre on a major street. However, Council would retain the ability to create pedestrian improvements along regional roads, through measures such as:
· improving sidewalk and boulevard areas
· creating curb bulges, where these protect full-time parking (noting that most major roads do not permit full-time parking)
· adding trees, benches and other beautification elements
· adding signalized pedestrian crossings
Staff will continue to seek clarification of the definition of "existing capacity". Depending upon response, Council may wish to clarify our understanding of the City's ability to implement pedestrian priority areas as a condition attached to our submission to the Major Road Network.Next Steps
A regional Major Road Technical Advisory Committee (MRTAC) has been constituted to study the issue of regional roads under three headings:
· Proposed network
- confirm criteria and review last minute additions
· Maintenance
- confirm unit maintenance costs
· Capital Development
- develop a five-year capital plan for development
The Major Roads Technical Advisory Committee has proposed a preliminary Major Road Network. After further public and technical review, Council is asked to approve a network before the end of October, 1998, in order to meet the end of year deadline to submit a Major Roads funding proposal to the GVTA.
Public Referral
It is proposed that this report be circulated for discussion to the public, who may wish to comment on the criteria for selection and/or the Major Road Network. These comments, together with an update on the status of roadway planning in general as developed by the interim GVTA team, will be forwarded to Council in the fall. Council may wish to hear delegations at this time.CONCLUSION
The new Greater Vancouver Transportation Authority has been given the mandate under the agreement of maintaining a set of major roads to facilitate intra-regional mobility. Broad criteria to define regional roads have been developed which, when applied, yield a proposed Major Road Network shown in Figure 1. Vancouver streets are specifically shown in Figure 2 along with additions proposed by staff.
It is expensive to maintain roads. The GVTA will compensate municipalities for the maintenance of these regional roads. Since Vancouver maintained its own roads in the past through dedicated budgets, these new monies, in the order of $2-$3 Million annually upon the full implementation of the formula, would represent a more appropriate source of funding than the current property tax base, or could be devoted to other functions at Council's discretion, such as reduction of taxes or new programs.
Upon designation of major roads, Council will be expected to keep the roads in good repair with monies provided by the GVTA and would not be permitted to reduce the people-carrying capacity of the street. Council would retain ownership of the streets, decide on its operation and be the sole initiator of improvement projects.
In the months ahead the GVTA must develop a capital budget based on submissions from member municipalities, finalize the unit maintenance costs within the constraints of the funding available and the necessary expansion of the transit system.
The public is invited to comment on these proposals. Council will hear delegations in the Fall at which time it will be asked to formally declare a set of major roads.
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APPENDIX A: PRINCIPLES
Principle #1: The role of the regional transportation authority (GVTA) with respect to roads should be limited to achieving overall coordination, planning and funding of the Major Road Network. GVTA funding may be conditional on meeting certain criteria but the autonomy of the local municipality with respect to decisions concerning municipally owned roads within its boundaries should be absolute excepting only the case where a municipality wishes to decrease the person-trip capacity of an element of the Major Road Network.
Principle #2: The principal source of staff advice to the GVTA Board, with respect to the Major Road Network, should be the staff of local municipalities gathered together in advisory committee(s). The role of GVTA technical transportation staff, with respect to the Major Road Network, should be to support and complement such advisory committees, rather than be independent and apart from such committees.
Principle #3: RAAC should serve in an advisory capacity to the GVTA Board similar to the relationship it has with the GVRD Board. A new Major Roads Technical Advisory Committee (MRTAC) should be established, comprising staff appointees from each municipality, to provide policy and technical advice to the GVTA Board. On matters of broad significance, such as capital plans, budgets and overall policies the MRTAC should report through RAAC; on other more specific, technical and day to day matters, such as the application of specific policies and service standards or the evaluation and funding of specific projects the MRTAC should report directly to the GVTA Board.
Principle #4: Any road declassified by way of the Agreement will be included in the network at the sole discretion of the municipality in which it is located;
Principle #5: Any other road may be proposed for inclusion by the local municipality in which it is located; the GVTA will not consider a municipally owned road for inclusion in the Major Road Network unless that road has been so proposed by the local municipality;
Principle #6: The GVTA Board, on advice from the MRTAC, will establish criteria for evaluating proposals to include roads in the network and consider proposals to include roads in the network in accordance with those criteria; the six criteria attached to the Agreement should be regarded as an initial guide to this process;
Principle #7: Once included in the network, roads can only be removed from the network by mutual consent between the GVTA and the respective local authority. However GVTA funding for roads in the network would be contingent on local municipalities abiding by the agreed upon standards to maintain the functionality of the network.
Principle #8: The GVTA will own the three declassified bridges - Patullo, Knight Street and Westham Island (Canoe Pass) - and the Albion Ferry and will provide 100% of the funding necessary to operate, maintain and rehabilitate these facilities to an agreed upon set of standards.
Principle #9: The GVTA will provide 100% of the funding necessary to operate, maintain and rehabilitate declassified roads retained within the network to an agreed upon set of standards.
Principle #10: The GVTA should initially provide seventy percent of the funding necessary to operate, maintain and rehabilitate other municipally owned roads in the network. This percentage will increase annually so that one hundred per cent funding is provided after four years.
Principle #11: Funding for the operation, maintenance and rehabilitation of the Major Road Network will be distributed directly to municipalities on a block funding formula, based on the proportion of lane kilometres in a municipality to the total lane kilometres in the major road system. Adjustments will be made to account for (1) the initial difference in funding principles for declassified and uploaded roads, (2) the need for the GVTA to fund the rehabilitation of below average declassified roads to average standards, (3) the need to recognize the responsibility of local municipalities to fund the rehabilitation of below average uploaded roads to average standards. These funds can only be spent directly on the Major Road Network and the municipalities shall keep a record of all expenditures for audit purposes. The Municipalities will be responsible for seeing that the work is carried out.
Principle #12: During the transition period, the MRTAC in conjunction with GVRD staff, and with input and guidance from RAAC as appropriate, will develop overall standards of operations and maintenance for roads in the network, establish current average conditions of the network, develop reliable per lane kilometre estimates of the costs to operate, maintain and rehabilitate roads of average condition to the proposed standards, and estimate the costs of bringing any below average components of the declassified road system up to average condition; and submit these to the GVTA Board for review and approval as the basis for the operations, maintenance and rehabilitation budget and funding allocations.
Principle #13: The GVTA Board, having fully consulted RAAC and the MRATC, will adopt annual and five year capital plans for the upgrading of the Major Road Network, circulate them to local municipalities for review and comment, provide for input from the public and other levels of government as appropriate, and submit final draft plans to the GVRD Board for ratification;
In addition, during the transition period the MRTAC, in conjunction with GVRD staff and with input and guidance from RAAC as appropriate, will prepare a preliminary assessment of a 5 year capital plan for upgrading the Major Road Network giving preferential consideration to declassified roads in the context of meeting the goals of the Livable Region Strategic Plan, with this activity to be completed by December 31, 1998.
Principle #14: The capital plans will establish the appropriate funding sources for the projects in the plan, including any cost sharing agreements.
Principle #15: To ensure a reasonable base level of funding for ongoing capital improvement to the Major Road System, the GVTA should consider establishing an ongoing minimum capital budget allocation for such purposes from a dedicated source other than the property tax.
Principle #16: The approval of the local municipal council is required for a capital project to proceed within its jurisdiction.
Principle #17: Local municipalities will be responsible for carrying out the projects contained within the approved capital plan.
Principle #18: Local municipalities may carry out other capital projects on the Major Road Network, not provided for in the capital plan(s), without financial support from the Authority, subject to the dispute resolution procedure concerning projects which would reduce the capacity of the Major Road Network.
Principle #19: A dispute is defined as a disagreement between the GVTA and a Municipality on:
1) A decision by the Authority not to include a road in the network which has been proposed for inclusion by the local municipality in which it is located;
2) A proposal by either the GVTA or a local municipality to remove a road from the network;
3) The applicability of the standards of maintenance established for the regional road network to a particular circumstance;
4) The audited statement of expenses claimed by a local municipality to operate, maintain and rehabilitate roads in the network;
5) A capital project proposed by a local municipality which reduces the capacity of an element of the Major Road Network which is not included in the approved capital plan;
6) Any other matter brought forward by the GVTA and a local municipality voluntarily for dispute resolution.
Where necessary to achieve resolution, disputes will be referred to a third party dispute resolution mechanism, and decisions shall be binding on both parties, except where such decision would likely create a budget over-run or deficit, in which case the parties shall be allowed to negotiate a phased solution to the satisfaction of the arbitrator to avoid such over-runs or deficits.
APPENDIX B: GVRD CRITERIA - (APRIL 1997)
i) Regional Activity Centres
The MRN exists to serve the regional-level transportation needs in Greater Vancouver. Since transportation is a derived demand which stems from economic and social activities, it is very important that regionally-significant land use locations are well served by the transportation infrastructure of which roads are a major component.
The term "Activity Centre" is used to denote a concentration of land uses and/or activities which result in transportation demands. Four major types of Activity Centres were considered:
· gateways
· regional town centres
· major educational institutes (post secondary)
Only Activity Centres of regional importance were considered in this evaluation. It is recognized that there exist many other Activity Centres which are of municipal importance such as hospitals, community centres, neighbourhood commercial centres and industrial strips, etc. However, these land uses are within the domain of municipally-provided services. They usually generate shorter distance travel within municipal boundary and are well served by the Major Road Network.
Gateways are defined as points of entry/exist through which this region interacts with the rest of the province, country and the world.
Commercial activities constitute a large part of the region's economy. The metropolitan core of the Vancouver Central Area (comprising of Downtown, West End, False Creek, and Central Broadway) is the pre-eminent business and commercial centre in the region. In addition to the Vancouver metropolitan core, the eight Regional Town Centres as identified in the Livable Regional Strategic Plan are also considered to be of regional significance. A Regional town Centre typically combines into one location a mixture of higher density commercial, retail, residential land uses as well as community services. Altogether, there is one Central Business District and eight Regional Town Centres included in the evaluation.
In terms of regionally-significant educational institutes, only post-secondary schools are considered since elementary and secondary schools are municipal functions which are served by the Major Road Networks. Educational institutes are considered to be regionally-significant if they have more than 10,000 full time students. There are three in the regions: the University of British Columbia (UBC), Simon Fraser University (SFU), and British Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT).
A regionally-significant industrial area is more difficult to define. Industrial areas are a vital part of the region's economy since they both provide employment for the region's residents and products for local consumption and export. The combination of three different indicators were considered to be important: employment, floor space and economic output. While relatively reliable employment figures are available from the 1994 employment survey, there is no known current and reliable source for the last two indicators. For the purpose of this report, industrial areas with total employment greater than 5,000 are included as Regional Activity Centres. It should be noted that 19 qualified industrial areas together contain 80% of the total employment in the industrial areas within GVRD.
A road which either provides direct access into an Activity Centre (e.g. Highway 17 leading up to Tsawwassen Ferry Terminal) and/or connects interacting Activity Centres (e.g. King George Highway connecting New Westminster City Centre to Surrey City Centre) is considered a major road. In cases where the Activity Centres are located in proximity of a major road but direct accesses are provided by short section of either privately or municipally-owned roads, these roads were not included as major roads.
ii) Inter-Municipal Travel
The majority of traffic on major roads should be either inter-regional or regional (i.e. inter-municipal). Inter-regional travel is relatively easy to identify as it is usually associated with gateway locations (e.g. Highway 1 and Highway 17). Identifying inter-municipal travel, on the other hand, necessitates two sub-criteria, one qualitative and one quantitative. A road is considered likely to carry inter-municipal travel if it physically connects municipalities (e.g. Lougheed Highway) or the traffic on it is long-distance. The 1994 travel survey in the region reveals that average commuter travel distance is approximately 13 km. A shorter distance of 10 km is considered to be appropriate for use in the evaluation since it takes into account the many shorter-distance, but no less significant, inter-municipal travel in the more compact Burrard Peninsula. To ensure that only higher-volume roads with a majority of the traffic being inter-municipal were included, the screening factors were applied: 1) at least 70% of the traffic must be longer than 10 km; and 2) the total peak hour peak direction traffic volume must be greater than 800 vehicles/hour. The 800 vph figure was derived from the fact that the minimum service classification of a major road is likely a signalized two-lane road which has a nominal capacity of 800vph per direction. Sensitivity analysis was conducted to see if variation of these numbers would result in significantly different results and it was found that the network is quite "insensitive" to changes.
iii) Major Transit Corridor
The Major Road Network should support regional-level transit service since transit will be the focus of future transportation provision in accordance with Transport 2021. It was determined that a road with a minimum of 10 through-buses in the peak direction during the peak hour (i.e. one through bus every 5 minutes) is considered a major transit corridor and warrants to be included as a major road.
iv) Goods Movement
Efficient goods movement is very important to the economic and social well-being of this region. Goods must be delivered to its customers in a timely manner either for direct consumption or commercial purposes.
Roads which carry significant truck traffic were include as major roads. Typically, a 5% truck composition in the peak hour is considered to be significant. Since a major road has been previously defined as having at least 800 vph and the 1992 truck survey revealed that approximately 3-5% of the total daily truck traffic occurs in the peak hour, this translates into a "ball-park" figure of 800 trucks per day. It should be noted that initially, the idea of using municipally-designated truck route maps as the basis of the evaluation was considered but was later rejected because: 1) not all municipalities have designated truck routes; and 2) municipalities use different rationale to designate their routes and the rationale may or may not be consistent with regional objectives.
v) Emergency Response
An emergency route is a route that is predefined, identifiable and capable of withstanding natural disasters. It is used in a post-disaster situation for relocation of affected people to a point of collection and transport of emergency supplies and personnel to key distribution points. Since 1995, the Joint Emergency Liaison Committee (JELC) consisting of provincial and municipal representatives has been conducting work in the area of emergency planning and response. One of the products of the committee's work is the designation of emergency routes. Since it is in the best interest of the regional that a network of roads will remain operational in the event of a major disaster, the major response routes are also included as major roads.
vi) Network Continuity
Similar to provincial and Major Road Networks, the MRN should be a complete and continuous network in which travel from one point to another can be made in a relatively uninterrupted fashion. The last of the six criteria is one which pertains to network continuity. A road section which provides a key linkage between other Major Roads is also considered a major road.
NOTE FROM CLERK: ELECTRONIC COPIES OF FIGURES 1-3 AND APPENDIX C -ON FILE IN THE OFFICE OF THE CITY CLERK.
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(c) 1998 City of Vancouver